Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


US6025215A - Method of making field effect transistors - Google Patents

Method of making field effect transistors
Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US6025215A
US6025215AUS08/708,469US70846996AUS6025215AUS 6025215 AUS6025215 AUS 6025215AUS 70846996 AUS70846996 AUS 70846996AUS 6025215 AUS6025215 AUS 6025215A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
source
thin film
forming
drain
layer
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
US08/708,469
Inventor
Charles H. Dennison
Monte Manning
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Micron Technology Inc
Original Assignee
Micron Technology Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Micron Technology IncfiledCriticalMicron Technology Inc
Priority to US08/708,469priorityCriticalpatent/US6025215A/en
Priority to US08/989,366prioritypatent/US6251714B1/en
Priority to US09/222,609prioritypatent/US6376287B1/en
Application grantedgrantedCritical
Publication of US6025215ApublicationCriticalpatent/US6025215A/en
Anticipated expirationlegal-statusCritical
Expired - Fee Relatedlegal-statusCriticalCurrent

Links

Images

Classifications

Definitions

Landscapes

Abstract

A thin film field effect transistor includes: a) a thin film channel region; b) a pair of opposing electrically conductive first and second source/drain regions adjacent the thin film channel region; c) a gate insulator and a gate positioned adjacent the thin film channel region for electrically energizing the channel region to switch on the thin film field effect transistor; d) the first source/drain region having a first thickness, the second source/drain region having a second thickness, the channel region having a third thickness; at least one of the first and second thicknesses being greater than the third thickness. Methods are disclosed for making thin field effect transistors.

Description

This invention was made with Government support under Contract No. MDA972-92-C-0054 awarded by Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA). The Government has certain rights in this invention.
RELATED PATENT DATA
This patent resulted from a continuation application under 37 CFR § 1.60(b) of prior application Ser. No. 08/132,705 filed on Oct. 6, 1993, entitled "Thin Film Transistors and Method of Making", by the following named inventors: Charles H. Dennison and Monte Manning, now abandoned.
TECHNICAL FIELD
This invention relates specifically to film transistor technology.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
As circuit density continues to increase, there is a corresponding drive to produce smaller and smaller field effect transistors. Field effect transistors have typically been formed by providing active areas within a bulk substrate material or within a complementary conductivity type well formed within a bulk substrate. One recent technique finding greater application in achieving reduced transistor size is to form field effect transistors with thin films, which is commonly referred to as "thin film transistor" (TFT) technology.
With TFTs, a substantially constant thickness thin film of material (typically polysilicon) is first provided. A central channel region of the thin film is masked, while opposing adjacent source/drain regions are doped with an appropriate p or n type conductivity enhancing impurity. A gate insulator and gate is provided either above or below the thin film channel region, thus providing a field effect transistor having active and channel regions formed entirely within a thin film as opposed to a bulk substrate.
In TFT technology, one goal is to provide the thin film as thin as possible to produce a thin channel region which provides maximized desired on/off characteristics for the transistors. Such, however, adversely affects source/drain region conductance due to diminished volume of material, thus resulting in undesirable elevated Vcc source/drain resistance.
It would be desirable to improve upon methods of forming thin film transistors and in improving thin film transistor constructions.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Preferred embodiments of the invention are described below with reference to the following accompanying drawings.
FIG. 1 is a top diagrammatic plan view of a substantially completed portion of a semiconductor substrate provided with a thin film transistor in accordance with the invention.
FIG. 2 is a view of a semiconductor wafer fragment taken at one processing step in accordance with the invention, and positionally corresponds with an X--X line cut through the FIG. 1 plan view, but is taken at a point in time before all the components represented by FIG. 1 have been produced.
FIG. 3 is a view of the FIG. 2 wafer fragment shown at a processing step subsequent to that shown by FIG. 2.
FIG. 4 is a view of the FIG. 2 wafer fragment shown at a processing step subsequent to that shown by FIG. 3.
FIG. 5 is a view of the FIG. 2 wafer fragment shown at a processing step subsequent to that shown by FIG. 4.
FIG. 6 is a view of the FIG. 2 wafer fragment corresponding in processing sequence to the step shown by FIG. 5, but positionally corresponding with a Y--Y line cut relative to FIG. 1.
FIG. 7 is a diagrammatic section of the FIG. 2 semiconductor wafer taken at a processing step subsequent to that shown by FIG. 5, and positionally representing an X--X cut.
FIG. 8 is a view of the FIG. 7 wafer showing a Y--Y positional cut.
FIG. 9 is a sectional view of an alternate semiconductor wafer fragment processed in accordance with alternate aspects of the invention.
FIG. 10 is a view of the FIG. 9 wafer taken at a processing step subsequent to that shown by FIG. 9.
FIG. 11 is a sectional view of the FIG. 9 wafer taken at a processing step subsequent to that shown by FIG. 10.
FIG. 12 is a diagrammatic sectional view of a further alternate semiconductor wafer fragment processed in accordance with further alternate methods in accordance with the invention.
FIG. 13 is a diagrammatic sectional view of still a further alternate embodiment semiconductor wafer fragment processed in accordance with still further alternate techniques in accordance with the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
This disclosure of the invention is submitted in furtherance of the constitutional purposes of the U.S. Patent Laws "to promote the progress of science and useful arts" (Article 1, Section 8).
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, a method of forming a thin film field effect transistor comprises the following steps:
providing a transistor gate;
providing a thin film transistor layer comprising first and second source/drain areas separated by an intervening thin film channel region, the thin film channel region being gated by the transistor gate through a gate insulator, the thin film transistor layer having a selected thickness;
providing a layer of electrically conductive material adjacent the thin film transistor layer;
patterning and etching the electrically conductive material to define first and second source/drain blocks; and
the first and second source/drain blocks electrically interconnecting with the respective thin film first and second source/drain areas to define composite first and second source/drain regions having thickness which is greater than the thin film layer thickness.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, a thin film field effective transistor comprises:
a thin film channel region;
a pair of opposing electrically conductive first and second source/drain regions adjacent the thin film channel region;
a gate insulator and a gate positioned adjacent the thin film channel region for electrically energizing the channel region to switch on the thin film field effect transistor;
the first source/drain region having a first thickness, the second source/drain region having a second thickness, the channel region having a third thickness; at least one of the first and second thicknesses being greater than the third thickness.
Referring first to FIGS. 1-8 and initially to FIG. 2, there illustrated is a semiconductor wafer fragment indicated generally byreference numeral 10. Such illustrates but one portion of a static random access memory (SRAM) cell employing a pair of pull down transistor gates 12 and 14. Such are provided over a bulk semiconductor substrate 16 including an associated gate oxide layer 18 andfield oxide region 20. Pull down gates 12 and 14 each comprise conductive polysilicon regions 22 which may be capped with higher conductive material regions 24, such as WSix. Pull down gates 12 and 14 are also provided with oxide sidewall spacers 26 and nitride caps 28. An insulatinglayer 30, typically borophosphosilicate glass (BPSG), surrounds or otherwise encapsulates pull down gates 12 and 14. Electrically conductive polysilicon plugs 32 and 34 are provided over pull down gates 12 and 14 to electrically connect with the upper surface of the respective regions 24. For purposes of the continuing discussion, conductive poly plug 32 has an upper surface 36.BPSG layer 30 is capped with a Si3 N4 layer 38.
Conductive polysilicon plug 32 in accordance with the invention is utilized as a transistor gate for a thin film transistor, and more specifically in this described embodiment comprises a bottom gate for producing a bottom gated thin film transistor. FIG. 1 also illustrates an outline 32 representative of the size and shape of the thin film transistor gate. As depicted, at least local planarizing in the vicinity of bottom gate 32 (FIG. 2) has been conducted to provide upper bottom gate surface 36 in a substantially planar form. Planar surface 36 is substantially co-planar with adjacent upper surfaces, such as the upper surfaces of nitride layer 38. A preferred technique for producing the construction as described to this point is disclosed and provided in our U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/061,402, filed on May 12, 1993, and entitled "Fully Planarized Thin Film Transistor (TFT) And Process To Fabricate Same", now abandoned.
A gate insulator layer 40, preferably SiO2, is provided and patterned as shown. An example thickness would be 300 Angstroms. A thin film transistor layer 42 is provided thereatop. Such preferably comprises polysilicon provided to a thickness of from about 100 Angstroms to about 350 Angstroms. This could be provided by polysilicon deposition, or by deposition of an amorphous silicon followed by a crystallization technique, such as solid phase crystallization.
A masking layer 44, typically SiO2, is deposited to a thickness of about 2,000 Angstroms. Material of layer 44 might ultimately be sacrificial, or portions thereof remain permanently on the wafer. A preferred technique as described below is to utilize all the material of layer 44 ultimately as sacrificial material, such that its composition from an electrically conductive/non-electrically conductive standpoint is immaterial. If the material of layer 44 is ultimately to remain on the produced wafer, it will be provided to be electrically non-conductive to provide satisfactory thin film transistor operation. An example of another material usable for layer 44 is polyimide.
A layer of photoresist is provided, and patterned to produce a masking block 46. The outline of masking block 46 is also viewable in FIG. 1.
Referring to FIG. 3, masking block 46 has been utilized during an etch of layer 44 to produce an oxide masking block 48 relative to underlying thin film transistor layer 42. Such covers and defines a thinfilm channel region 50 as well as first and second opposing source drain areas 52, 54 separated by intervening thinfilm channel region 50. Oxide mask 48 also upwardly exposes first and second source/drain areas 52, 54, respectively. Thin film transistor layer 42 is preferably conductively doped with a p+ impurity at this point in the process, thus rendering source/drain areas 52 and 54 electrically conductive. Thus, thinfilm channel region 50 is gateable by bottom transistor gate 32 through gate insulating layer 40.
Referring to FIG. 4, a layer 56 of electrically conductive material, preferably ultimately conductively doped polysilicon, is provided atop and thereby adjacent thin film transistor layer 42 and over oxide mask block 48. An example and preferred thickness for layer 56 is 2,000 Angstroms. Polysilicon layer 56 can be in situ conductively doped or doped subsequent to deposition. Such ultimate doping of layer 56 might effectively also desirably provide doping of underlying first and second source/drain areas 52 and 54 respectively, such that 52 and 54 might not previously be required to be doped in a separate doping step.
Referring to FIG. 5, polysilicon layer 56 is chemical-mechanical polished (CMP) to remove polysilicon from above oxide block 48 and provide a substantially globally planarized upper surface. An example CMP step would be to utilize a slurry comprising KOH, SiO2 particles (silica) and water. FIG. 6 illustrates a FIG. 1 Y--Y positional cut of the wafer at the processing step represented by FIG. 5.
Referring to FIG. 7, oxide block 48 has been wet stripped from the wafer, and polysilicon layer 56 patterned and etched to define first and second source/drain blocks 58 and 60, respectively. FIG. 8 illustrates the Y--Y cut of the wafer at the processing step of FIG. 7, and FIG. 1 as well represents the pattern outline ofblocks 58 and 60. As is apparent from at least FIG. 7, first and second source/drain blocks 58, 60 respectively, electrically interconnect with the thin film first and second source/drain areas 52 and 54, respectively. Such defines composite first and second source/drain regions 62, 64 respectively, which have thickness which is greater than the thickness of thin film layer 42 utilized to produce thinfilm channel region 50.
The above provided method and construction provide a desired advantage of enabling producing a thin film channel region as thin as desirable, while minimizing resistance in source/drain region 62, 64 the result of their greater thickness and thereby greater volume of conductive material for desirable operation of the thus formed thin film transistor.
The invention proceeds with reference to FIGS. 9-11 for description of an alternate embodiment thin film transistor construction and method in accordance with the invention. The FIGS. 1-8 embodiment described a method and construction wherein the thin film transistor layer was provided before the subsequent layer of electrically conductive material was provided and patterned. The embodiment of FIGS. 9-11 shows the opposite, whereby the layer of electrically conductive material is provided and patterned before thin film transistor layer application, and in the context of a bottom-gated thin film transistor. Specifically, FIG. 9 illustrates a semiconductor wafer fragment 70 comprised of a conductive bottom gate 72 formed within a bulk insulating layer 74. A layer 76 of insulating gate dielectric is provided atop insulator 74. A layer 78 of electrically conductive material, preferably polysilicon, is provided atop layer 76.
Referring to FIG. 10, layer 78 has been patterned and etched to produce offset first and second source/drain blocks 80 and 82, respectively.
Referring to FIG. 11, a thin film transistor layer 84 is provided. Such would be patterned and doped to provide first and second respective source/drain areas 86 and 88 respectively, and intervening thin film channel region 90. Thus, such produces first and second source/drain regions 92 and 94 having a thickness which is greater than thin film channel region 90. This is but one example of a bottom-gated thin film transistor in accordance with the invention wherein the layer of electrically conductive material utilized for producing source/drain blocks is provided and patterned before application of the thin film transistor layer.
FIGS. 12 and 13 illustrate alternate methods and constructions in accordance with the invention employing top gating in a thin film transistor. Referring first to FIG. 12, there illustrated is a semiconductor wafer fragment generally indicated by reference to the numeral 100. Such comprises a bulk substrate region 102 and overlying planarized oxide layer 104. A thin film channel layer 106 has been provided, and comprises first and second source/drain areas 108 and 110, respectively, separated by an intervening thin film channel region 112. Thereafter, a top gate insulating layer 114 has been deposited and patterned as shown, in conjunction with depositing and patterning of a gate layer for producing top gate 116. Insulating sidewall spacers 118 would be provided as shown. A layer of electrically conductive material is provided, patterned and etched to define first and second source/drain blocks 120 and 122, respectively. First and second source/drain blocks 120 and 122 respectively, electrically interconnect with the respective thin film first and second source/drain areas 108 and 110 to define composite first and second source/drain regions 124 and 126, respectively. Thus, composite first and second source/drain regions 124 and 126 are defined which have thickness greater than the thin film layer thickness utilized to produce transistor channel region 112.
FIG. 13 illustrates an alternate embodiment wafer fragment generally indicated byreference numeral 130. Such is comprised of abulk substrate 132 andoverlying planarized layer 134 of insulating SiO2. A thinfilm transistor layer 136 is provided atopoxide layer 134. Thinfilm transistor layer 136 is comprised of first and second source/drain areas 138 and 140, respectively, which are separated by an intervening thinfilm channel region 142. Thereafter, a layer of electrically conductive material (typically polysilicon) is provided over thinfilm transistor layer 136. Such is patterned and etched to define first and second source/drain blocks 144 and 146, respectively. Thus, such blocks electrically interconnect with the respective thin film first and second source/drain areas 138 and 140, thus defining composite first and second source/drain regions 148 and 150 which have a thickness greater than thinfilm transistor layer 136 thickness.
Subsequently, agate dielectric layer 152 is deposited. Then, a conductive top gate layer is deposited and patterned to provide atop gate 154.
In each of the above-described embodiments with respect to FIGS. 12 and 13, a top gate conductor is provided. Alternate embodiments could of course be produced and fall within the scope of the existing invention which is only intended to be limited by the concluding claims. By way of example only as one alternate, top gated thin film transistors in accordance with the invention could also of course be produced by first provision of the source/drain blocks, followed by subsequent provision of the thin film transistor layer thereatop.
In accordance with the above-described embodiments, thin film transistors are provided wherein each of the source/drains are provided to have substantially equal and greater thickness than the thin film channel regions. Alternately in accordance with the invention, a thin film field effect transistor could be provided wherein perhaps only one of the source/drain areas is provided with greater thickness, or each of the source/drain areas provided with greater thickness than the channel region, but of differing thicknesses.
In compliance with the statute, the invention has been described in language more or less specific as to structural and methodical features. It is to be understood, however, that the invention is not limited to the specific features shown and described, since the means herein disclosed comprise preferred forms of putting the invention into effect. The invention is, therefore, claimed in any of its forms or modifications within the proper scope of the appended claims appropriately interpreted in accordance with the doctrine of equivalents.

Claims (16)

We claim:
1. A method of forming source/drain regions for a bottom gated thin film field effect transistor comprising the following steps:
forming a bottom gate;
forming first and second source/drain blocks opposingly adjacent the bottom gate and elevationally higher than the gate; and
forming a thin film transistor layer over the first and second source/drain blocks, the thin film transistor layer and the first and second source/drain blocks together forming source/drain regions which are thicker than an intervening thin film transistor channel region.
2. The method of forming source/drain regions of claim 1 further comprising forming a gate insulating layer over the bottom gate, and wherein the gate insulating layer is formed before the first and second source/drain blocks are formed.
3. The method of forming source/drain regions of claim 1 further comprising forming a gate insulating layer over the bottom gate, and wherein the gate insulating layer is formed after the first and second source/drain blocks are formed.
4. The method of forming source/drain regions of claim 1 wherein the thin film transistor layer and the source/drain blocks constitute the same material.
5. The method of forming source/drain regions of claim 1 wherein the thin film transistor layer and the source/drain blocks comprise conductively doped polysilicon.
6. The method of forming source/drain regions of claim 1 wherein the bottom gate is formed before the source/drain blocks.
7. A method of forming source/drain regions for a thin film field effect transistor comprising the following steps:
forming a transistor gate;
forming first and second source/drain blocks opposingly adjacent the transistor gate and elevationally higher than the gate; and
forming a thin film transistor layer over the first and second source/drain blocks, the thin film transistor layer and the first and second source/drain blocks together forming source/drain regions which are thicker than an intervening thin film transistor channel region.
8. The method of forming source/drain regions of claim 7 wherein the transistor gate is formed before the source/drain blocks.
9. The method of forming source/drain regions of claim 7 wherein the thin film transistor layer and the source/drain blocks constitute the same material.
10. The method of forming source/drain regions of claim 7 wherein the thin film transistor layer and the source/drain blocks comprise conductively doped polysilicon.
11. The method of forming source/drain regions of claim 7 wherein the transistor gate is a bottom gate for the field effect transistor.
12. A method of forming a bottom-gated thin film field effect transistor comprising the following steps:
forming a transistor bottom gate on a substrate;
at least local planarizing in the vicinity of the bottom gate to form a substantially planar upper bottom gate surface which is substantially co-planar with adjacent upper surfaces of the substrate;
after the planarizing, forming a thin film transistor layer over the bottom gate, the thin film transistor layer comprising first and second conductively doped active areas separated by an intervening thin film channel region, the thin film transistor layer having a thickness;
after forming the thin film transistor layer, forming a masking layer to cover the thin film channel region and outwardly expose the first and second active areas;
after forming the masking layer, providing a layer of polysilicon over the masking layer and the first and second active areas; and
polishing the layer of polysilicon to at least in part define discrete first and second source/drain blocks, the first and second source/drain blocks electrically interconnecting with the respective thin film first and second active areas to define composite first and second conductively doped transistor active regions having a thickness which is greater than the thin film layer thickness.
13. The method of forming a bottom-gated thin film field effect transistor of claim 12 further comprising forming a gate insulating layer over the bottom gate, and wherein the gate insulating layer is formed before the first and second source/drain blocks are formed.
14. The method of forming a bottom-gated thin film field effect transistor of claim 12 further comprising forming a gate insulating layer over the bottom gate, and wherein the gate insulating layer is formed after the first and second source/drain blocks are formed.
15. The method of forming a bottom-gated thin film field effect transistor of claim 12 wherein the active areas and the source/drain blocks constitute the same material.
16. The method of forming a bottom-gated thin film field effect transistor of claim 12 wherein the active areas and the source/drain blocks comprise conductively doped polysilicon.
US08/708,4691993-05-121996-09-05Method of making field effect transistorsExpired - Fee RelatedUS6025215A (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
US08/708,469US6025215A (en)1993-10-061996-09-05Method of making field effect transistors
US08/989,366US6251714B1 (en)1993-10-061997-12-12Method of making thin film field effect transistors
US09/222,609US6376287B1 (en)1993-05-121998-12-29Method of making field effect

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
US13270593A1993-10-061993-10-06
US08/708,469US6025215A (en)1993-10-061996-09-05Method of making field effect transistors

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US13270593AContinuation1993-05-121993-10-06

Related Child Applications (2)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US08/989,366ContinuationUS6251714B1 (en)1993-10-061997-12-12Method of making thin film field effect transistors
US09/222,609ContinuationUS6376287B1 (en)1993-05-121998-12-29Method of making field effect

Publications (1)

Publication NumberPublication Date
US6025215Atrue US6025215A (en)2000-02-15

Family

ID=22455231

Family Applications (8)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US08/479,670Expired - LifetimeUS5807769A (en)1993-10-061995-06-06Methods of making thin film transistors
US08/708,469Expired - Fee RelatedUS6025215A (en)1993-05-121996-09-05Method of making field effect transistors
US08/708,489Expired - Fee RelatedUS6235562B1 (en)1993-10-061996-09-05Method of making field effect transistors
US08/937,055Expired - LifetimeUS5847406A (en)1993-10-061997-09-24Thin film field effect transistor
US08/989,366Expired - Fee RelatedUS6251714B1 (en)1993-10-061997-12-12Method of making thin film field effect transistors
US09/079,529Expired - Fee RelatedUS5923965A (en)1993-10-061998-05-14Thin film transistors and method of making
US09/153,367Expired - Fee RelatedUS6150201A (en)1993-10-061998-09-15Methods of forming top-gated thin film field effect transistors
US09/222,609Expired - Fee RelatedUS6376287B1 (en)1993-05-121998-12-29Method of making field effect

Family Applications Before (1)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US08/479,670Expired - LifetimeUS5807769A (en)1993-10-061995-06-06Methods of making thin film transistors

Family Applications After (6)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US08/708,489Expired - Fee RelatedUS6235562B1 (en)1993-10-061996-09-05Method of making field effect transistors
US08/937,055Expired - LifetimeUS5847406A (en)1993-10-061997-09-24Thin film field effect transistor
US08/989,366Expired - Fee RelatedUS6251714B1 (en)1993-10-061997-12-12Method of making thin film field effect transistors
US09/079,529Expired - Fee RelatedUS5923965A (en)1993-10-061998-05-14Thin film transistors and method of making
US09/153,367Expired - Fee RelatedUS6150201A (en)1993-10-061998-09-15Methods of forming top-gated thin film field effect transistors
US09/222,609Expired - Fee RelatedUS6376287B1 (en)1993-05-121998-12-29Method of making field effect

Country Status (3)

CountryLink
US (8)US5807769A (en)
JP (3)JPH07161999A (en)
DE (1)DE4435461C2 (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US6376287B1 (en)*1993-05-122002-04-23Micron Technology, Inc.Method of making field effect
US20040108535A1 (en)*2000-06-162004-06-10Drynan John M.Interconnect line selectively isolated from an underlying contact plug
US20120175623A1 (en)*2011-01-072012-07-12Tutt Lee WTransistor including multiple reentrant profiles

Families Citing this family (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
JPH10199991A (en)*1996-12-091998-07-31Texas Instr Inc <Ti> Method of forming a contact on a substrate and the contact
US6110767A (en)*1998-07-162000-08-29Vanguard International Semiconductor CorporationReversed MOS
US6049106A (en)1999-01-142000-04-11Micron Technology, Inc.Large grain single crystal vertical thin film polysilicon MOSFETs
US6368933B1 (en)*1999-12-152002-04-09Intel CorporationTap connections for circuits with leakage suppression capability
US6927435B2 (en)*2001-01-162005-08-09Renesas Technology Corp.Semiconductor device and its production process
US7314794B2 (en)*2005-08-082008-01-01International Business Machines CorporationLow-cost high-performance planar back-gate CMOS
US9076873B2 (en)*2011-01-072015-07-07International Business Machines CorporationGraphene devices with local dual gates
US8649209B1 (en)*2011-03-252014-02-11Altera CorporationMemory element circuitry with reduced oxide definition width

Citations (32)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
JPS5833872A (en)*1981-08-241983-02-28Toshiba CorpManufacture of thin film field effect transistor
US4586064A (en)*1982-10-061986-04-29U.S. Philips CorporationDMOS with high-resistivity gate electrode
JPS61252667A (en)*1985-05-011986-11-10Seiko Epson Corp Thin film transistor and its manufacturing method
JPS63143462A (en)*1986-12-041988-06-15株式会社デンソーHeat pump type refrigerator
JPH02123743A (en)*1988-11-021990-05-11Fujitsu Ltd Manufacturing method of thin film transistor
JPH02250333A (en)*1989-03-231990-10-08Nec CorpManufacture of thin-film field-effect transistor array
US4988638A (en)*1988-11-071991-01-29Xerox CorporationMethod of fabrication a thin film SOI CMOS device
JPH03159250A (en)*1989-11-171991-07-09Fuji Xerox Co Ltd Manufacturing method of MOS type semiconductor device
JPH03194937A (en)*1989-12-221991-08-26Sony CorpManufacture of thin film transistor
US5047360A (en)*1988-09-301991-09-10U.S. Philips CorporationMethod of manufacture thin film transistors
US5112765A (en)*1990-07-311992-05-12International Business Machines CorporationMethod of forming stacked tungsten gate PFET devices and structures resulting therefrom
US5118639A (en)*1990-05-291992-06-02Motorola, Inc.Process for the formation of elevated source and drain structures in a semiconductor device
JPH04162537A (en)*1990-10-241992-06-08Sony CorpManufacture of thin-film transistor
JPH05114734A (en)*1991-10-221993-05-07Mitsubishi Electric Corp Semiconductor device
US5213990A (en)*1992-04-011993-05-25Texas Instruments, IncorporatedMethod for forming a stacked semiconductor structure
US5238857A (en)*1989-05-201993-08-24Fujitsu LimitedMethod of fabricating a metal-oxide-semiconductor device having a semiconductor on insulator (SOI) structure
US5241193A (en)*1992-05-191993-08-31Motorola, Inc.Semiconductor device having a thin-film transistor and process
JPH05243272A (en)*1992-03-021993-09-21Matsushita Electron CorpManufacture of thin-film transistor
US5266507A (en)*1992-05-181993-11-30Industrial Technology Research InstituteMethod of fabricating an offset dual gate thin film field effect transistor
US5273921A (en)*1991-12-271993-12-28Purdue Research FoundationMethods for fabricating a dual-gated semiconductor-on-insulator field effect transistor
US5279980A (en)*1990-02-271994-01-18Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd.Method of manufacturing a thin-film semiconductor device having an alpha-tantalum first wiring member
US5286659A (en)*1990-12-281994-02-15Sharp Kabushiki KaishaMethod for producing an active matrix substrate
US5334862A (en)*1993-08-101994-08-02Micron Semiconductor, Inc.Thin film transistor (TFT) loads formed in recessed plugs
US5366909A (en)*1994-01-071994-11-22Goldstar Electron Co., Ltd.Method for fabricating thin film transistor
US5376578A (en)*1993-12-171994-12-27International Business Machines CorporationMethod of fabricating a semiconductor device with raised diffusions and isolation
US5411909A (en)*1993-02-221995-05-02Micron Technology, Inc.Method of forming a planar thin film transistor
US5429962A (en)*1992-12-221995-07-04Goldstar Co., Ltd.Method for fabricating a liquid crystal display
US5474941A (en)*1990-12-281995-12-12Sharp Kabushiki KaishaMethod for producing an active matrix substrate
US5482870A (en)*1990-06-081996-01-09Seiko Epson CorporationMethods for manufacturing low leakage current offset-gate thin film transistor
US5498557A (en)*1992-06-201996-03-12Sony CorporationMethod of making SRAM to improve interface state density utilizing PMOS TFT
US5521107A (en)*1991-02-161996-05-28Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd.Method for forming a field-effect transistor including anodic oxidation of the gate
US5541126A (en)*1991-12-041996-07-30Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki KaishaMethod of making semiconductor device having thin film transistor

Family Cites Families (31)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
JPS56132506A (en)*1980-03-221981-10-16Ando Electric Co LtdMeasuring device for center position of hole
JPS5785262A (en)*1980-11-171982-05-27Toshiba CorpManufacture of metal oxide semiconductor type semiconductor device
JPS58123765A (en)*1982-01-181983-07-23Seiko Epson Corp Method for manufacturing thin film semiconductor devices
JPS58132502A (en)1982-02-021983-08-06株式会社 ウロコ製作所Method and device for rewinding veneer
JPS62162362A (en)*1986-01-101987-07-18Mitsubishi Electric CorpMos integrated circuit and manufacture thereof
JPH065757B2 (en)*1987-03-261994-01-19日本電気株式会社 Semiconductor device manufacturing method
JP2515330B2 (en)1987-05-111996-07-10株式会社 シグマ Coin changer
JPS6472101A (en)1987-09-111989-03-17Omron Tateisi Electronics CoDrawing device for concentric pattern
JPH0664410B2 (en)1987-09-141994-08-22凸版印刷株式会社 Full-color rainbow hologram and its manufacturing method
NL8801379A (en)*1988-05-301989-12-18Imec Inter Uni Micro Electr METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING A THIN FILM TRANSISTOR AND SUCH A THIN FILM TRANSISTOR
JPH02143462A (en)*1988-11-241990-06-01Sony CorpThin film transistor
JPH02287593A (en)*1989-04-281990-11-27Toshiba Corp Display connection status determination method
JP3194937B2 (en)1989-08-092001-08-06株式会社日立製作所 Variable capacity swash plate type compressor
US5231296A (en)*1989-12-191993-07-27Texas Instruments IncorporatedThin film transistor structure with insulating mask
JPH0444470A (en)1990-06-121992-02-14Clarion Co LtdSynchronizing signal separator circuit
JP3036037B2 (en)1990-10-042000-04-24セイコーエプソン株式会社 Method for manufacturing semiconductor device
JPH05267666A (en)*1991-08-231993-10-15Semiconductor Energy Lab Co Ltd Semiconductor device and manufacturing method thereof
JP3116436B2 (en)*1991-08-072000-12-11セイコーエプソン株式会社 Method for manufacturing thin film transistor
JPH0563197A (en)1991-09-041993-03-12Sharp CorpThin film transistor and manufacture thereof
JP2894391B2 (en)*1991-09-201999-05-24三菱電機株式会社 Thin film transistor and method of manufacturing the same
US5238897A (en)*1991-09-271993-08-24North Carolina Center For Scientific Research, Inc.Catalyst for molecular catalytic cracking of heavy hydrocarbons at ambient temperatures, and method of making the same
US5616934A (en)*1993-05-121997-04-01Micron Technology, Inc.Fully planarized thin film transistor (TFT) and process to fabricate same
US5858821A (en)*1993-05-121999-01-12Micron Technology, Inc.Method of making thin film transistors
US5348899A (en)*1993-05-121994-09-20Micron Semiconductor, Inc.Method of fabricating a bottom and top gated thin film transistor
US5650655A (en)*1994-04-281997-07-22Micron Technology, Inc.Integrated circuitry having electrical interconnects
DE4435461C2 (en)*1993-10-062001-09-20Micron Technology Inc N D Ges Thin film transistor and its manufacturing process
US5386909A (en)1993-11-011995-02-07Spector; DonaldDisplay package for shaped candy pieces
US5429062A (en)*1993-12-271995-07-04Trabka; Richard J.Rapid bailing device
US5429982A (en)*1994-02-071995-07-04National Science CouncilMethod for growing field oxides in LOCOS technique
US6043507A (en)*1997-09-242000-03-28Micron Technology, Inc.Thin film transistors and methods of making
JP3159250B2 (en)1997-11-272001-04-23日本電気株式会社 Plasma display panel

Patent Citations (32)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
JPS5833872A (en)*1981-08-241983-02-28Toshiba CorpManufacture of thin film field effect transistor
US4586064A (en)*1982-10-061986-04-29U.S. Philips CorporationDMOS with high-resistivity gate electrode
JPS61252667A (en)*1985-05-011986-11-10Seiko Epson Corp Thin film transistor and its manufacturing method
JPS63143462A (en)*1986-12-041988-06-15株式会社デンソーHeat pump type refrigerator
US5047360A (en)*1988-09-301991-09-10U.S. Philips CorporationMethod of manufacture thin film transistors
JPH02123743A (en)*1988-11-021990-05-11Fujitsu Ltd Manufacturing method of thin film transistor
US4988638A (en)*1988-11-071991-01-29Xerox CorporationMethod of fabrication a thin film SOI CMOS device
JPH02250333A (en)*1989-03-231990-10-08Nec CorpManufacture of thin-film field-effect transistor array
US5238857A (en)*1989-05-201993-08-24Fujitsu LimitedMethod of fabricating a metal-oxide-semiconductor device having a semiconductor on insulator (SOI) structure
JPH03159250A (en)*1989-11-171991-07-09Fuji Xerox Co Ltd Manufacturing method of MOS type semiconductor device
JPH03194937A (en)*1989-12-221991-08-26Sony CorpManufacture of thin film transistor
US5279980A (en)*1990-02-271994-01-18Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd.Method of manufacturing a thin-film semiconductor device having an alpha-tantalum first wiring member
US5118639A (en)*1990-05-291992-06-02Motorola, Inc.Process for the formation of elevated source and drain structures in a semiconductor device
US5482870A (en)*1990-06-081996-01-09Seiko Epson CorporationMethods for manufacturing low leakage current offset-gate thin film transistor
US5112765A (en)*1990-07-311992-05-12International Business Machines CorporationMethod of forming stacked tungsten gate PFET devices and structures resulting therefrom
JPH04162537A (en)*1990-10-241992-06-08Sony CorpManufacture of thin-film transistor
US5286659A (en)*1990-12-281994-02-15Sharp Kabushiki KaishaMethod for producing an active matrix substrate
US5474941A (en)*1990-12-281995-12-12Sharp Kabushiki KaishaMethod for producing an active matrix substrate
US5521107A (en)*1991-02-161996-05-28Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd.Method for forming a field-effect transistor including anodic oxidation of the gate
JPH05114734A (en)*1991-10-221993-05-07Mitsubishi Electric Corp Semiconductor device
US5541126A (en)*1991-12-041996-07-30Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki KaishaMethod of making semiconductor device having thin film transistor
US5273921A (en)*1991-12-271993-12-28Purdue Research FoundationMethods for fabricating a dual-gated semiconductor-on-insulator field effect transistor
JPH05243272A (en)*1992-03-021993-09-21Matsushita Electron CorpManufacture of thin-film transistor
US5213990A (en)*1992-04-011993-05-25Texas Instruments, IncorporatedMethod for forming a stacked semiconductor structure
US5266507A (en)*1992-05-181993-11-30Industrial Technology Research InstituteMethod of fabricating an offset dual gate thin film field effect transistor
US5241193A (en)*1992-05-191993-08-31Motorola, Inc.Semiconductor device having a thin-film transistor and process
US5498557A (en)*1992-06-201996-03-12Sony CorporationMethod of making SRAM to improve interface state density utilizing PMOS TFT
US5429962A (en)*1992-12-221995-07-04Goldstar Co., Ltd.Method for fabricating a liquid crystal display
US5411909A (en)*1993-02-221995-05-02Micron Technology, Inc.Method of forming a planar thin film transistor
US5334862A (en)*1993-08-101994-08-02Micron Semiconductor, Inc.Thin film transistor (TFT) loads formed in recessed plugs
US5376578A (en)*1993-12-171994-12-27International Business Machines CorporationMethod of fabricating a semiconductor device with raised diffusions and isolation
US5366909A (en)*1994-01-071994-11-22Goldstar Electron Co., Ltd.Method for fabricating thin film transistor

Non-Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
Colinge, Jean Pierre Some Properties of Thin Film SOI MOSFETs ; IEEE Circuites and Devices Magazine, 1987, pp. 16 20.*
Colinge, Jean-Pierre "Some Properties of Thin-Film SOI MOSFETs"; IEEE Circuites and Devices Magazine, 1987, pp. 16-20.
Peters, Laura "SOI Takes Over Where Silicon Leaves Off"; Semiconductor Int'l., Mar. 1993, pp. 48-51.
Peters, Laura SOI Takes Over Where Silicon Leaves Off ; Semiconductor Int l., Mar. 1993, pp. 48 51.*
T. Hashimoto et. al., "An 8 nm-thick Polysilicon MOS Transistor and Its Thin Film Effects", Ext. Abs -21st Conf. on Solid State Devices and Materials, Tokyo, Japan 1989, pp. 97-100.
T. Hashimoto et. al., An 8 nm thick Polysilicon MOS Transistor and Its Thin Film Effects , Ext. Abs 21st Conf. on Solid State Devices and Materials, Tokyo, Japan 1989, pp. 97 100.*
Wolf, Ph.D., S., "Silicon Processing for VLSI Era vol. 2: Process Integration", Lattice Press, 1990.
Wolf, Ph.D., S., Silicon Processing for VLSI Era vol. 2: Process Integration , Lattice Press, 1990.*

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US6376287B1 (en)*1993-05-122002-04-23Micron Technology, Inc.Method of making field effect
US20040108535A1 (en)*2000-06-162004-06-10Drynan John M.Interconnect line selectively isolated from an underlying contact plug
US7061115B2 (en)*2000-06-162006-06-13Micron Technology, Inc.Interconnect line selectively isolated from an underlying contact plug
US20120175623A1 (en)*2011-01-072012-07-12Tutt Lee WTransistor including multiple reentrant profiles
US8847226B2 (en)*2011-01-072014-09-30Eastman Kodak CompanyTransistor including multiple reentrant profiles

Also Published As

Publication numberPublication date
DE4435461A1 (en)1995-04-13
US6251714B1 (en)2001-06-26
US5807769A (en)1998-09-15
JP2960061B2 (en)1999-10-06
US6376287B1 (en)2002-04-23
JP2001135827A (en)2001-05-18
JPH11214701A (en)1999-08-06
JPH07161999A (en)1995-06-23
US6150201A (en)2000-11-21
US6235562B1 (en)2001-05-22
US5847406A (en)1998-12-08
DE4435461C2 (en)2001-09-20
US5923965A (en)1999-07-13

Similar Documents

PublicationPublication DateTitle
US8802520B2 (en)Method of forming a field effect transistor having source/drain material over insulative material
US5736437A (en)Method of fabricating a bottom and top gated thin film transistor having an electrical sidewall connection
US5348899A (en)Method of fabricating a bottom and top gated thin film transistor
US6025215A (en)Method of making field effect transistors
US5923977A (en)Method of forming CMOS circuitry including patterning a layer of conductive material overlying field isolation oxide
US6066549A (en)Semiconductor processing method of forming a conductive gate line and semiconductor processing method of making ohmic contact between a transistor gate line and a substrate diffusion region
US5945747A (en)Apparatus for moving a tool
US5903013A (en)Thin film transistor and method of manufacturing the same
US5434103A (en)Method of forming an electrical connection
US5858821A (en)Method of making thin film transistors
US6037196A (en)Process for producing an integrated circuit device with at least one MOS transistor
US6297093B1 (en)Method of making an electrically programmable memory cell
US6043507A (en)Thin film transistors and methods of making

Legal Events

DateCodeTitleDescription
FEPPFee payment procedure

Free format text:PAYOR NUMBER ASSIGNED (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: ASPN); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

FPAYFee payment

Year of fee payment:4

FPAYFee payment

Year of fee payment:8

REMIMaintenance fee reminder mailed
LAPSLapse for failure to pay maintenance fees
STCHInformation on status: patent discontinuation

Free format text:PATENT EXPIRED DUE TO NONPAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEES UNDER 37 CFR 1.362

FPLapsed due to failure to pay maintenance fee

Effective date:20120215


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp